Andy Warhol's Screen Tests (1964-1966) + Live Musical Score By Hapsburg Braganza

Part of the Artist Films: The Invisible And The Real
Director: | Andy Warhol |
---|---|
Certificate: | Unknown |
Length: | |
Format: | 16mm |
Language: | Silent |
Country: | USA |
Warhol's 16mm screen tests
Tonight we'll be showing a selection of Andy Warhol's Screen Tests, which are a fascinating series of moving-image portraits, shot over three years in Warhol's famous New York studio, The Factory. Filmed with Warhol’s 16mm Bolex camera, these silent, black-and-white films capture those whom the artist considered to have star appeal: Factory regulars, friends and other celebrities.
Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, Jonas Mekas, etc
Stripped of the social sphere upon which their personas were constructed, Warhol’s subjects – Bob Dylan, Lou Reed, Jona Mekas and Edie Sedgwick among them – react with varying degrees of comfort to the camera’s unflinching intimacy. Denied a voice or even editorial manipulation, every gesture is given a purity that is distinctly cinematic.
At once, these films add to and undercut their subjects’ personalities, exploring with a strange intensity the fine line between the public and the private, the authentic and the assumed, the tangible and the hidden…
Programme
Here is the list of people featuring in the screentests that we'll show (each person appears in one screentest of about 3 to 4 minutes):
#1 Ethel Scull (1964)
#2 Barbara Rose (1964)
#3 Robin (1965)
#4 Jane Holzer (1964)
#5 Lou Reed (1966)
#6 Edie Sedgwick (1965)
#7 John Ashbery (1966)
#8 Jonas Mekas (1966)
#9 Ann Buchanan (1964)
#10 Paul Morrissey (1965)
#11 Bob Dylan
Prints sent from MOMA in New York for the night!
The 16mm prints were sent to us just for the night, all the way from the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) from New York!
You can check out MOMA's website here: http://www.moma.org/
What others have to say about Screen Tests
“The sitter’s star potential is always tested: his or her physical stamina, embarrassment threshold, self-possession, charisma and (this is Warhol, after all) physical attractiveness.” – BRIAN DILLON, ART CRITIC
+ Live Score by Hapsburg Braganza
We're very excited to announce that the great Hapsburg Braganza will be composing the music and playing live to the screening.
Hapsburg Braganza is a great experimental one-man band.
He describes himself as a "musicmaker of several different styles, including electroacoustic composition, solo electric guitar, psychedelia, sound collage, minimal electronics…"
You can check out his music here:
http://soundcloud.com/hapsburg-braganza
EVENT ON FACEBOOK HERE
http://www.facebook.com/events/576281175734306/?fref=ts
TICKETS
On the door: £5 / £3.50 (concessions)
Or advance tickets online: £4.50 and £3 (concessions) http://www.wegottickets.com/event/204679
Other films in the Artist Films: The Invisible And The Real:

21
Film: Fishtank (1998) + Short Film: Sunday (2009)
21 Feb 2013, 7:30 p.m.
This double bill brings together works from two distinct British artists whose body of work also includes photography.

28
Film: Bodysong (2003)
28 Feb 2013, 7:30 p.m.
Simon Pummell’s remarkable film recalls Bill Morrison’s Decasia (2002) in its astonishing accumulation of archive material, arranged here to evoke the entire process of life, from birth to death by way of love, violence, religion and so on.

07
Film: An Evening Of Nicolas Provost Shorts (2002-2011)
7 Mar 2013, 7:30 p.m.
“The most beautiful thing I discovered is the fine line between fiction and reality. The moment in which the audience asks themselves ‘is this real or is this fiction? ” – NICOLAS PROVOST

14
Film: Our Daily Bread (2005)
14 Mar 2013, 7:30 p.m.
Award-scooping documentary Our Daily Bread is a highly impressive look at the mechanised process of food production.

24
Film: The Arbor (2010) + Short: The Girl Chewing Gum (1976)
24 Mar 2013, 7:30 p.m.
The perceived and the actual are at odds in this double-bill conclusion to our Real and the Invisible film season.